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| My auction paddle would be used strictly as a fan. |
feel like one of New York's elites. There's also nothing like spending your morning at Sotheby's on the Upper East Side to make you feel completely out of your depth as far as actually bidding on the stuff being auctioned.
But there I was anyway, one of just 25 people onsite hoping for a chance of owning a piece of "The Private Collection of Kathryn & Bing Crosby". None of the items included Der Bingle's toupees or the belt -- lovingly nicknamed "The Strap" -- he used on the four sons from his first marriage.
Nope, this little sell-off concentrated on art, clothing, personal items, and show biz memorabilia. It was the latter collection I was interested in.
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| You'd think I'd have gotten a hand for paying just $15 for my alarm clock. |
Now, during my movie poster auction-attending days, people who spent five or six figures on a three-sheet for, say, Earth vs. the Flyng Saucers, would get a round of applause from people in the room. Nobody responded to Mr. Clock Collector, so I gave him a thumbs-up. Not for winning so much as providing the first bit of excitement of the day.
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| Spending 4,000 bucks on these would have been the ultimate hat trick for me. |
By then, I should have known that sticking around for a bargain was a sucker's game. But it was still early and just being there allowed my wife to have the apartment to herself for a while -- a rare occurrence she treasures even more than when I'm there.
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| It sounds even more expensive in Japanese yen. |
The biggest sale I witnessed was for something called "On the Moors" by Sir Alfred James Mannings, P.R.A., R.W.S. Frankly, anyone with a bunch of letters after their name who isn't a medical professional is just a poseur. But the auctioneer assured us that "On the Moors" caused a sensation on its original exhibition in 1931 and was the largest piece of Mannings art Sotheby's ever handled. And at a million bucks, it must have been one of the priciest. To my untrained eyes, it looked like a painting that would have been owned by Ralph Kramden had he struck it rich in the lottery.
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| Considering Bing worked at Paramount, he should have gotten something resembling a mountain rather than the MGM lion. |
I enjoyed my first auction in 30 years but enjoyed even more realizing that I don't need any of this stuff. And apparently neither do the adult kids from Bing's second marriage. Looks like they're going to star in Road to A Big Payday.
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